Brick Biotopes at Milan Design Week

FABRIKAAT, Dutch for “to make by hand,” was an exhibition at Milan’s Ventura Lambrate, looking at design and craft in garden spaces.

Four teams of students in the Master of Interior Architecture & Retail Design program at the Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam, were given three months to respond to the following questions:

1. By embracing a bottom-up “research through making” approach to design, can new material behaviors and applications emerge?

2. In our digital age, what can be learned through the process of making by hand?

3. Can design solutions be offered that augment existing typologies in our built environment, such as the garden?

Team 1, Micaela Nardella from Italy and Oana Tudose from Romania, were my winners. They were inspired by the disappearance of the house sparrow in the Netherlands, to create a habitat for birds within built environments.

They designed the Brick Biotope, which has a dual function, as a brick, and as a home for house sparrows – meaning that bird habitats can be built in to urban spaces, rather than replaced by them.

The bricks encourage plants and wildlife into buildings, and add an interesting aesthetic to standard brick walls.

The bricks are made by pouring sand together with plaster and removing it by hand after the plaster has solidified, creating organic shapes within the standard brick form.

Katie Treggiden is Editor at Large for Design Milk, travelling all over the world discovering new and creative designs. She is also is a design journalist, curator, and consultant with more than 15 years experience in the creative industries, currently writing for the Guardian, Elle Decoration and AnOther Magazine among others. She is the author of Makers of East London and the founding editor of Fiera Magazine and confessions of a design geek.